Sacred Music Volume 127 Number 4

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Sacred Music Volume 127 Number 4 SACRED MUSIC Winter 2000 Volume 127 No. 4 St. Vincent's Archabbey (Latrobe, PA) SACRED MUSIC Volume 127, Number 4, Winter 2001 FROM THE EDITOR 3 Guest Editorial "PRIESTLESS" SUNDAY LITURGIES AND THE CHURCH MUSICIAN 5 Duane L.C.M. Galles FROM SACRED SONG TO RITUAL MUSIC 11 James Frazier WHEN FATHER BRADFORD GOES AWAY 23 Fr. Joseph Wilson REVIEWS 27 OPEN FORUM 28 NEWS 29 CONTRIBUTORS 30 INDEX TO VOLUME 127 31 SACRED MUSIC Continuation of Caecilia, published by the Society of St. Caecilia since 1874, and The Catholic Choirmaster, published by the Society of St. Gregory of America since 1915. Published quarterly by the Church Music Association of America. Office of Publication: 134 Christendom Drive, Front Royal, VA 22630-5103. E-mail: [email protected] Editorial Board: Kurt Poterack, Ph.D., Editor News: Kurt Poterack Music for Review: Calvert Shenk, Sacred Heart Major Seminary, 2701 West Chicago Blvd., Detroit, MI 48206 Susan Treacy, Dept. of Music, Franciscan University, Steubenville, OH 43952-6701 Membership, Circulation and Advertising: 5389 22nd Ave. SW, Naples, FL 34116 CHURCH MUSIC ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA Officers and Board of Directors President Father Robert Skeris Vice-President Father Robert Pasley General Secretary Amy Guettler Treasurer Ralph Stewart Directors Rev. Ralph S. March, S.O. Cist. Stephen Becker Father Robert Pasley Kurt Poterack Amy Guettler Paul F. Salumunovich Rev. Robert A. Skeris Theodore N. Marier Susan Treacy Brian Franck Monsignor Richard Schuler Calvert Shenk Ralph Stewart Membership in the Church Music Association of America includes a subscription to SACRED MUSIC. Membership is $20.00 annually; student membership is $10.00 annually. Single copies are $5.00. Send applications and changes of address to SACRED MUSIC, 5389 22nd Ave. SW, Naples, FL 34116. Make checks payable to the Church Music Association of America. Library of Congress catalog card number: 62-6712/MN SACRED MUSIC is indexed in the Catholic Periodical and Literature Index, Music Index, Music Article Guide, and Arts and Humanities Index. Cover: Madonna and Chancellor Rolin, Jan van Eyck, c. 1390-1441. Copyright by Church Music Association of America. 2001. ISSN: 0036-2255 SACRED MUSIC (ISSN 0036-2255) is published quarterly for $20.00 per year by the Church Music Association of America, 134 Christendom Drive, Front Royal, VA 22630-5103. Periodicals postage paid at Saint Paul, Minnesota. Postmaster: Send address changes to SACRED MUSIC, 5389 22nd Ave. SW, Naples, FL 34116. FROM THE EDITOR Guest Editorial Just after I sent the last issue to press, 1 saw a letter to the editor in the January Catholic World Report dealing with the very question my editorial had—the versus apsidem position. I received permission to reprint it, and I would be curious to know what Latinists think of this man's argument. K.P. As merely an Anglican, I hesitate to intrude into the family games of others. But as a teacher all my life of Latin, I must protest against an illiterate translation, reported in your October number ("Which Way to Turn: A Tale of Two Citations"), of a paragraph— bearing on the Mass ad orientem in the new General Instructions for the Roman Missal (GIRM). Would you like a Latin lesson? Consider the phrase: quod expedit ubicumque possibile sit. Quod is neuter. So it cannot possibly have as its antecedent celebratio {versus popu- lum), which is feminine. Quod clearly refers to the preceding sentence as a whole, where the crucial term is possit. In GIRM this verb is commonly used for things which are gen- uinely optional—as in the preceding two and following two paragraphs (297-298 and 300-301). Paragraph 299 says: The High Altar [not, be it observed, every altar] should be constructed away from the wall, so that the option is open [possit] of walking easily around it and using it for Mass facing the people. This [i.e., having the altar free-standing so that the options are open] is desirable wherever possible. GIRM continues—see paragraph 277—to accept that there will be churches where keeping the options open in this way is not "possible." And notice that according to the Oxford Latin Dictionary, ubicumque means only wherever. You rightly point out that the new GIRM repeats the instruction that, at certain points, the priest (or deacon) must be "turned to the people" (versus ad populum), clearly imply- ing that he may lawfully be turned away from them at other times. You could have men- tioned that these are not merely careless repetitions from earlier versions of the GIRM; I have noticed three places (Paragraphs 154, 181, 195) where the phrase is now added to the text of the Editio typica prima, and these paragraphs occur in the description of a nor- mal Sunday community Mass, celebrated perhaps with a deacon. Incidentally, I suspect that a redaction critic, asked why the quod . clause has been added, might surmise that the addition was intended to emphasize the need for flexi- bility in the placing of the altar (it's a good idea [expedit] to have a free-standing altar where this doesn't cause too much trouble), rather than to discourage ad orientem. Rev. J. W. Hunwicke Lancing College, Sussex, England It is with great sadness that I report the death of our long-time member and past President, Dr. Theordore Marier (+Feb. 24, 2001). There will be more on this man's life and contributions to American Catholic Church Music in a future issue. FROM THE EDITORS LITURGICAL MUSIC AND THE RESTORATION OF THE SACRED The Eleventh Annual Summer Music Colloquium sponsored by Christendom College in collaboration with the Church Music Association of America Elementary, Intermediate, and Advanced Gregorian Chant Choral Techniques Theology of Worship and of its Music Pastoral Liturgy Polyphony, Latin and English Organ Celebrant's chants for clergy, Latin and English June 19-24, 2001 For more information, contact: Fr. Robert A Skeris 722 Dillingham Avenue Sheboygan, WI53081-6028 (920) 452-8584 Fax: (920) 803-2312 Ukrainian Catholic National Shrine of the Holy Family (Washington, DC) "PRIESTLESS" SUNDAY LITURGIES AND THE CHURCH MUSICIAN In June 1988 the Congregation for Divine Worship issued a Directory for Celebrations in the Absence of a Priest. The document noted that occasionally—especially in mission lands—a priest is not available to celebrate Sunday Mass for the people. The Directory went on to make provision for other types of Sunday celebrations in such cases. Pursuant to this Directory, the National Conference of Catholic Bishops of the United States issued norms for such celebrations which became effective New Year's, 1994. In 1995 the Canon Law Society of America published a short study by Barbara Cusack and Therese Guerin Sullivan entitled Pastoral Care in Parishes without a Pastor: Application Canon 517(2), which attempts to develop standard terminology for personnel at "priest- less" parishes. More recently on 13 November 1997 an instruction by eight Vatican di- casteries on "Some Questions Regarding Collaboration of Nonordained Faithful in Priests' Sacred Ministry" was published. The instruction was approved by Pope John Paul II in forma specifica and so is no mere administrative directive but rather has the sta- tus of papal law.1 Meanwhile a flood of literature has appeared on the subject of "priestless' Sundays and on the related topic of "priestless" parishes.2 Given this flood of literature about a phenomenon supposedly rare, church musicians may be somewhat confused and may wonder how this development will affect sacred music. The purpose of this article is to sift through the various applicable norms and meld them together in a way useful for the church musician so as to provide practical guidance for church musicians should, on the spur of the moment, this rare event strike their parishes and the Sunday celebration be "priestless." PRIESTLESS The Roman Directory seems to anticipate that "priestless" Sundays will not be a grow- ing phenomenon and states that the intent of the present document is not to encourage, much less facilitate unnecessary or contrived Sunday assemblies without the celebration of the Eucharist. The intent rather is simply to guide and to prescribe what should be done when real circumstances require the decision to have Sunday celebrations in the absence of a priest (p. 1). The Directory notes that in the past in mission lands Christians have at times been so scattered that a priest could not reach them all on every Sunday. Also there have been cases where persecution or restrictions on religious freedom have prevented a priest from being present. Scarcity of priests and social and economic circumstances have also led to widely scattered churches and sometimes to priestless Sundays (n. 3-5).3 The Directory must now, however, be read in the light of the 1997 instruction in so far as the leader of the Sunday celebration is a layman. The instruction seemed to view lay collaboration as properly restricted to "situations of emergency and chronic necessity" (p. 399). Moreover, the instruction clearly stated that "the abuse of multiplying 'excep- tional' cases over and above those so designated and regulated by normative discipline" is to be avoided (p. 442). Thus the instruction will have provided a corrective to some overboard interpretations of the Directory. In determining whether there should be a Sunday celebration in the absence of a priest, the first step is to determine—once it is clear that Mass cannot be celebrated in a particular place—whether the faithful can go to another place nearby for Mass (n. 18). Furthermore, a priestless Sunday liturgy may never be held on a Sunday in places where Mass had already been celebrated or is to be celebrated or was celebrated on the preceding Saturday evening, even if the Mass is celebrated in a different language.
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